Tech giants back effort to revolutionize teaching

Once intended for a young cousin, Sal Khan's online tutorials now
attract millions of people, laying the groundwork for a new approach to
education, "60 Minutes" reports.

Sal Khan, founder of the Khan Academy.

(Credit:
CBS)

Sal Khan teaches math, science, and history to millions of students, but none has ever seen his face.
Khan is the voice and brains behind the Khan Academy--a free online
tutoring site that was born out of a young cousin's struggles with
algebra in 1994. His classroom has grown from a few hundred pupils to
more than 4 million a month.
Khan, 35, believes he can transform education worldwide, and his
approach is now being tested in American schools. Along the way, the
former hedge fund analyst has won the support of Google Chairman Eric
Schmidt and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, who calls Khan "a teacher
of the world."
He has since founded a nonprofit with a simple but ambitious goal: "to
provide a free, world-class education for anyone, anywhere." CBS' news
magazine "60 Minutes" (see segment video below) caught up with Khan at
his startup's tiny office, located above a tea shop in Silicon Valley.
It all began when he agreed to remotely tutor his cousin Nadia, a
seventh-grader in New Orleans, with her algebra. He recorded the
15-minute lessons and posted them to YouTube. They proved helpful to
Nadia--and to total strangers who stumbled upon them and sent him
letters.

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"I started getting feedback like, 'You know, my child has dyslexia, and
this is the only thing that's getting into him'," he said. So in 2009,
he quit his job to devote himself to the academy full time.
Since the effort's humble beginnings eight years ago, Khan, who has
three degrees from MIT and an MBA from Harvard, has recorded and
uploaded 3,000 lessons. Now, thanks to more than $15 million in funding
from Google and Gates--who was using the free tutorials to teach his own
children--Khan has hired engineers and designers to develop a software
platform he hopes will change the way math is taught.
One of the fruits of Khan's labors is a free iPad app that was published today to the iTunes Store, offering free access to the academy's full library of lessons.
Will Khan's approach to integrate technology into education succeed
where so many other efforts have failed? Google's Schmidt is optimistic
and says he sees promise with Khan's approach.
"Innovation never comes from the established institutions," Schmidt
says. "It's always a graduate student or a crazy person or somebody with
a great vision. Sal is that person in education in my view.
"He built a platform. If that platform works, that platform could completely change education in America."
The full segment: